Last Thursday and #39;s violent protest in Brussels, presented by the organizers as a revolt 'for the survival of farmers' and against the 'Brussels dictatorship', in reality looked like a siege with hidden objectives broader than the slogans pasted on the fences of the European Parliament: behind the fury in the Place du Luxembourg, with black smoke from tires, thrown potatoes, projectiles and clashes with the police, the stakes quickly shifted from specific agricultural demands to...